Gwyddfarch was a hermit and founder of a Celtic abbey at Meifod in Wales.[1]

He was a son of Amalarus[2] and disciple of Saint Llywelyn at Welshpool. About 550 AD he founded a monastery[3] at Meifod. This establishment became the mother church of several other monasteries and was a centre of the order for over one thousand years, and within a generation the monastery had become a centre of pilgrimage.

Gwyddfarch taught Tysilio,[4] who replaced him as abbot.[5][6]

Legend holds that near the end of his life Tysilio talked the aging abbot out of a pilgrimage to Rome.[7] He died about the year 610.[8]

He is commemorated on 3 November.[9]

References

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